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Iran says to give crushing response to any aggression

Despite the enemies’ advantages in economic, scientific and military fields, the Islamic Revolution front has always been victorious over the past decades, Fadavi said in a speech on Wednesday in the northern province of Golestan.

The adversaries thought they could undermine the foundation of the Islamic Revolution via hard war but they have realized that the revolution’s power and capability is beyond what they could imagine, the senior commander added.

He also stated that the enemy cannot even imagine the scope of the Islamic Republic’s deterrent power, warning that the country would respond powerfully to even the slightest act of aggression.

In comments in April, Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces Major General Mohammad Hossein Baqeri noted all Iranian military forces are ready to give a decisive and crushing response to any threat at any level in such a way that the enemies of Iran would regret taking a hostile action against the Islamic establishment.

Iran’s Covid deaths hit lowest level since 5th wave

Health Ministry figures show so far, 128,634 people have died of the disease since the start of the Pandemic.

Meanwhile, 5,882 new cases of Covid-19 were detected countrywide over the past day, pushing the total caseload to 6,063,775.

Iranian healthcare workers have administered over 100 million doses of Covid vaccine to people in the country. So far, 56,282,022 people have received the first dose of Covid and 43,783,020 have been fully inoculated. Meanwhile, 683,188 people have received the booster shot, that is, the third dose of Covid vaccine.

Now all vaccination places are giving the third dose to citizens over 60. The vaccination campaign is credited for the downward trend in Covid deaths, infections and hospitalizations over the past months.

Iran’s Health Minister Bahram Einollahi on Thursday said a sixth wave of the disease still poses a threat to the country. He said Europe, Russia and some countries in other parts of the world are grappling with a new wave, so Iranians must keep cautious to avert that.

The number of red, orange, yellow and blue cities has not changed since Tuesday. 26 cities in Iran are marked red, which means the risk of Covid is very high there while 87 cities are orange, 222 yellow and 113 blue. Blue cities face the least level of risk from Covid.

 

Iran FM: Tehran seeks to lift sanctions in Vienna talks

Hossein Amir Abdollahian, in a phone conversation with his Polish counterpart Zbigniew Rau, stressed that all parties have reached a common understanding that the United States is the main culprit behind the current situation regarding the Iran nuclear deal.

Rau and Amir Abdollahian also held talks over the Tehran-Warsaw ties as well as regional and international developments in the telephone conversation. Rau referred to the historical relations between Iran and Poland, especially the Iranian people offering humanitarian hospitality to Polish immigrants during World War II. The Polish Foreign Minister described the ties with Iran as an honor for both sides, saying next year Poland will hold a special ceremony to mark the 80th anniversary of this historic event.

Amir Abdollahian also described the existence of a set of positive attitudes between the people of the two countries in the long-standing relations as important. He also announced Iran’s readiness to hold a joint ceremony to mark the 80th anniversary of the Iranians’ hosting of Polish citizens.

The Iranian Foreign Minister appreciated the donation of one million doses of Covid vaccine by Poland as an example of human relations between the two countries. He spoke of the situation of vaccination and vaccine production and also the covering of more than 4 million Afghan refugees in Iran despite inhumane sanctions against the country. Amir Abdollahian said Iran welcomes any initiative by other countries, especially Poland, to help the refugees and the people of Afghanistan who are not in a good situation these days.

Referring to the humanitarian crisis in Yemen and Iran’s support for peace there, Amir Abdollahian stressed that the Yemeni crisis has no military solution and that the humanitarian blockade of the country must be lifted and the war must end.

He described some areas of cooperation between the two countries, especially cultural and scientific and parliamentary diplomacy as good. The foreign minister however pointed out that the level of trade and economic relations between the two countries is not sufficiently high. Amir Abdollahian stressed the need for more cooperation between the private sectors of Iran and Poland.

The Polish foreign minister also reviewed bilateral relations from political, cultural and economic aspects and said his country is determined to further enhance ties with Iran.

He also thanked and supported Iran for its actions regarding Afghan refugees and addressed the illegal immigration crisis on Poland’s borders.

In this regard, Iran’s foreign minister referred to a number of Iranians who, under the influence of illegal actions by some human trafficking networks, travel to Belarus and from there illegally seek to enter Poland. Amir Abdollahian expressed concern over the situation of the Iranians and stressed that by sending the Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for consular affairs to the region, Iran managed to repatriate a number of wandering nationals stranded on the border between Belarus and Poland.

The two sides stressed that they will continue working together to resolve the issue.

It should be noted that in this telephone call, Amir Abdollahian extended the Iranian president’s warm greetings to the Polish president and also invited Poland’s foreign minister to visit Tehran.

Rau also asked Amir Abdollahian to give warm greetings of Polish officials to Iran’s president.

Tehran decries Israel-backed Canadian resolution against Iran

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said it is a shame that Canada has brought together “a clan of notorious governments with regards to human rights,” including the Israeli regime, the US and Britain, in order to teach Iranian people about human rights.

Khatibzadeh dismissed as groundless and lacking a legal basis the resolution proposed at the 3rd committee of the United Nations General Assembly by Canada and supported by certain Western countries as well as Tel Aviv.

He said the resolution is a rehash of unfounded allegations based on false information and insincere generalizations.

“This resolution is based on weak and divided international votes, and a great part of the ‘yes’ votes for it was the result of political pressure and various threats,” said the spokesman.

He said Canada and some other key advocates of this resolution are addicted to pressing ahead with a failed plan aimed at tarnishing Iran’s image.

“Unfortunately, some players which, themselves, have a long history of blatantly violating human rights, namely through arms sales to the tyrannical, occupying and aggressor regimes, are using human rights as a tool to advance their political objectives and interests,” he added.

“Such immoral and unjustifiable moves will not help promote the status of, and respect for the human rights on the world stage, but will only lead to a rise in negative clichés and political stigmas against nations,” he added.

“The move by the Canadian government and other advocates of this resolution, which is a potent example of abusing lofty human rights concepts and values in order to advance short-minded political goals, is condemned and lacks any legal foundation and effect,” Khatibzadeh added. 

He asked Canadian authorities to correct their anti-human moves both inside and outside that country and not only halt the regime’s systematic policy of committing genocide of native Canadians, but also be answerable for complicity in the Israeli regime’s inhumane crimes against Palestinian people.

Iran set to forge closer cooperation with IORA member states

Hossein Amir Abdollahian made the comment in a virtual meeting of IORA member states where he expressed his gratitude to the government of Bangladesh for its rotating presidency of IORA.

“Full of blessings as the Indian Ocean is for its littoral states, bright and wide-ranging prospects are for cooperation within IORA,” he noted.

“The latest development is that the Islamic Republic of Iran’s Center for Women has volunteered to work as the coordinator for IORA’s Women’s Economic Empowerment program,” he explained.

“Also, the Tehran-based IORA Regional Centre for Science and Technology Transfer enjoys the strong support of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s government,” the top diplomat said.

He then touched upon the COVID-19 challenge and its destructive consequences, saying, “The lifting of sanctions and the restoration of Iran’s rights will not only have positive economic and humane effects, but will undoubtedly result in the Islamic Republic of Iran’s stronger presence in regional cooperation arrangements, namely within IORA,” he added.

Armenia building new route for Iranian vehicles

After its completion, Iranian vehicles can use the Kapan-Datev road which is being reconstructed by Armenia. The road replaces the previous one, Kapan-Goris.  

Azerbaijan controls approximately 20 km out of a 400 km route from Norduz to Yerevan. It captured the area during last year’s war with Armenia and claims sovereignty over the section. 

Since last month, Azerbaijan has imposed strict regulations on Iranian drivers. This has caused major problems for Iranians passing through the 20-kilometer section of Armenia’s Goris-Kapan Road including having to pay tolls levied by Azerbaijani border guards.

Iran and Armenia had been seeking ways to bypass Azerbaijan.

In response to complaints by drivers, Armenia’s Minister of Regional Management and Infrastructure said the reconstruction work to prepare the new route is ongoing.

The Armenian official said the impassable section of the new road includes a steep slope that will be fixed and connected to the main road in a few months. 

The Armenian government is also building a highway linking the north to the south. The pavement is concrete and there are eight tunnels on the highway connecting the Iran-Armenia border to the Georgia-Armenia border.

Iran: Afghanistan neighbors shouldn’t left alone over refugees crisis

“Let’s be straightforward. This is not a local challenge and Afghanistan’s neighboring must not be left alone and expected to address this extremely difficult challenge single-handedly,” Iran’s permanent ambassador to the United Nations Majid Takht Ravanchi told a UN Security Council meeting on Wednesday.

“To date, we have done whatever in our power to help Afghans entering Iran, including through provision of basic needs,” he said of the country’s hosting nearly four million Afghans displaced by the United States’ 2001-2021 invasion of Afghanistan.

The refugees include thousands, who have entered Iran since the catastrophic and sudden American withdrawal from Afghanistan in August, the envoy added.

He cautioned that the number could, however, be added by hundreds of thousands more as the winter approaches and amid the US’s refusal to hand over the Afghan central bank’s assets to the Taliban government under the pretext of illegal sanctions.

“Due to unlawful and inhumane US sanctions and in the absence of sufficient new financial resources, we will be unable to help them on our own anymore,” Takht Ravanchi stated.

By sanctions, the official was also referring to the draconian and coercive economic measures that Washington returned against Iran in 2018 after leaving a historic nuclear agreement between the Islamic Republic and others.

In this context, he called on the international community and in particular donor countries to live up to their responsibilities and extend new and adequate financial resources to Afghanistan’s neighbors to help Afghan refugees and displaced persons.

Officials claim Iran-backed hackers targeting critical US sectors

The FBI, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) and the Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC) outlined the malicious activity in a joint advisory.

The agencies noted that the hackers had targeted “a broad range of victims across multiple US critical infrastructure sectors” since at least March of this year, often through exploiting vulnerabilities in devices from cybersecurity group Fortinet and Microsoft Exchange ProxyShell to launch ransomware attacks.

The Iranian-linked advanced persistent threat group (APT) was specifically found to be targeting the US health and transportation sectors, including a hospital specializing in children’s care in July, and to have gone after a domain for a US municipal government in May.

The ACSC has also seen the hackers target victims in Australia. 

“FBI, CISA, ACSC, and NCSC assess the actors are focused on exploiting known vulnerabilities rather than targeting specific sectors,” the advisory reads.

“These Iranian government-sponsored APT actors can leverage this access for follow-on operations, such as data exfiltration or encryption, ransomware, and extortion,” it added.

The advisory was released the day after Microsoft’s Threat Intelligence Center shared new findings on Iranian hacking activity. Researchers noted that Iranian hackers were “increasingly utilizing ransomware to either collect funds or disrupt their targets”, including through the same targeting of Fortinet vulnerabilities and Microsoft Exchange Servers vulnerable to ProxyShell that the advisory addressed.

CISA in August issued an alert urging organizations to immediately patch ProxyShell vulnerabilities.

Iran has long been viewed as one of the most high-profile and prolific nation states posing a threat to the US in cyberspace.

Reports claim, in recent months, Iranian government-linked hackers have gone after medical researchers in the US and Israel, and in October Microsoft released findings indicating that Iran was behind the targeting of US and Israeli defense companies.

In late October, the head of the Passive Defense Organization of Iran stated the United States and the Israeli regime were behind the recent cyberattack on Iran’s gas stations.

“We analyzed two incidents; one of them was the attack on Shahid Rajaee port, and the other the attack on the railways,” said Brigadier General Gholamreza Jalali in a televised interview.

“The two were similar [to the cyberattack on gas stations] in terms of the model of the attack,” he added.

“We believe the masterminds of those cyberattacks are definitely our enemies, i.e., the Americans and the Zionist regime [of Israel],” the top general noted.

However, he added, “We are reviewing technical information and cannot express our final viewpoint now.”

“When somebody wants to attack you at the middleware or hardware level, they should be able to infiltrate into, and have access to the information in the embedded system,” he explained.

Iran: Success in nuclear talks depends on US will

Deputy Foreign Minister for Political Affairs Ali Bagheri Kani wrote on Twitter he has explicitly declared Tehran’s stance on the talks during the meetings with foreign ambassadors residing in Iran.

In a related development, Bagheri Kani had stated over a week ago that Iran has no talks on nuclear issues in Vienna as the issue has already been solved completely within the framework of the 2015 nuclear deal, aka the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

As he stressed, the main question in the talks in the Austrian capital is the removal of the illegitimate sanctions and the aftermath resulting from the US unilateral withdrawal from the deal.

Son of former Iranian official acquitted of financial offenses

The lawsuit was filed by the Logistics Organization of the Iranian Red Crescent Society (IRCS).

Ramin had been sentenced to 17 years behind bars and €2 million restitution by the court of first instance, but was acquitted by the appeals court.

“I had, time and again, called for court sessions to be public. I wanted all those with a misunderstanding to realize that the lawsuit had nothing to do with rotten baby formula, embezzlement and even financial offenses,” said Ramin.

Back in 2014, the IRCS’s Logistics Organization sued Yassin Ramin, son of Mohammad Ali Ramin, former Iranian deputy culture minister, on misappropriation charges.

After an indictment was issued, the Judiciary referred to the case as one of “financial accounts irregularities.”

In 2019, the court handed down a sentence of imprisonment and restitution.